The
pieces that make up the Dry-break fuel filter
are its bottom, which can accept any dash 10
adapter, the micro-mesh filter itself, a poppet
valve and the related parts to hold it all together.
Tear-down time can take about 10 minutes max,
and there is no fuel lost with this new filter
system.
The Barry Grant Dry-break fuel filter is made
up of an Enduro pump "bottom-half" that has
an inlet that can be plumbed with either a dash
10 straight fitting or a dash 10 90-degree fitting.
Inside this bottom of the new fuel filter is
a specially-machined, spring-loaded and o-ringed
"poppet" valve that seals the whole system from
leakage when it's taken apart.
The filtration element is made up of an eight-micron,
pleated, stainless steel fabric that if ever
taken apart can stretch to nine feet in length.
"It can hold a lot of trash without any reduction
of fuel flow," Grant said. The filter element
is placed together with the outlet in-housing,
and besides some screws to hold the top of the
filter to the bottom, that is all the pieces
the part is made up of.
A T-handled Allen wrench
is all that's needed to take this filter apart.
Everything is sealed with rubber O-rings that
don't leak, even when saturated with racing
alcohol. The filter accepts either gasoline
or alcohol for fuel.
When it comes time to clean the fuel filter,
the racer merely has to loosen four Allen-headed
screws to take the filter apart. The whole operation
should take no more than 10 minutes, and the
new Barry Grant Dry-break filter can save the
racer not only time, but lost or spilled fuel.
And it just may prevent a fire hazard like the
one that hit our friend who was draining racing
gas from his racecar into a fuel jug.
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